====PAGE-LEVEL METADATA==== University Daily Kansan Page 0784 from reel: NP 9601 (2001-08-20 to 2001-12-13) https://digital.lib.ku.edu/ku-udk/31057 Title: Ping Pong Should Be Intramural Sport by Spring Summary: Editorial advocating for ping pong to become an intramural sport at the University of Kansas, discussing implementation and benefits. Category: editorial Subjects: university sports; intramural activities; student recreation Named Entities: Knopp, Andy [editorial board] Confidence: 0.9 Title: Halloween Brings Needed Rest From Political Correctness Summary: Columnist Marc Ingber discusses how Halloween provides a break from political correctness, allowing people to express themselves freely. Category: opinion Subjects: holidays; political correctness; cultural commentary Named Entities: Ingber, Marc [columnist] Confidence: 0.85 Title: Sex Column Stirring Strong Reaction Summary: Jonathan Ng analyzes the strong reactions to Meghan Bainum's sex column in the Kansan, discussing both positive and negative feedback. Category: opinion Subjects: student journalism; controversial topics; campus discourse Named Entities: Ng, Jonathan [reader representative]; Bainum, Meghan [columnist] Confidence: 0.8 Title: Share Your Vision of KU in 2030 Summary: Call for student submissions of essays, artwork, and ideas about what KU might be like in 2030, with details on how to submit. Category: opinion Subjects: university planning; student input; future development Confidence: 0.75 Title: Bruno Pieroni/Kansan Cartoon: Chicken Sandwich Comparison Summary: Editorial cartoon contrasting making a chicken sandwich alone versus with help, illustrating a point about collaboration or assistance. Category: editorial cartoon Confidence: 0.8 Title: [classifieds] Category: classifieds Confidence: 0.9 Title: [advertisements] Advertisers include: The Kansan Category: advertisements Confidence: 0.9 Note: Descriptive metadata for this item has been generated in part using AI (artificial intelligence) technologies and may be incomplete, misleading, or inaccurate. Please contact the Kenneth Spencer Research Library with specific questions or concerns.